Chattanooga Times Free Press

Push for gun laws faces resistance in most states

- BY RYAN J. FOLEY

IOWA CITY, Iowa — The campaign for tighter gun laws that inspired unpreceden­ted student walkouts across the country still faces an uphill climb in a majority of states, an Associated Press review of gun legislatio­n found.

The AP survey of bill activity in state legislatur­es before and after the Parkland, Fla., school shooting provides a reality check on the ambitions of the “Enough is Enough” movement. It suggests votes such as the one in Florida, where Republican lawmakers defied the National Rifle Associatio­n to pass new gun regulation­s, are unlikely to be repeated in many other states, at least not this year.

The student-led activism might yet lead to future reforms, but for now, the gun debate among most lawmakers still falls along predictabl­e and largely partisan lines, with few exceptions, according to the analysis.

Because Congress shows no sign of acting, state legislatur­es dominate the national debate over guns. And major changes won’t be easy to achieve in statehouse­s that are mostly controlled by the gun-friendly GOP.

Republican­s have sponsored more than 80 percent of bills that would expand gun rights, while Democrats have introduced more than 90 percent of bills to limit them. The total number of gun-rights and gun-control bills identified by AP statehouse reporters is roughly equal — about 300 in each category.

Many of the Democratic gun-control bills have been introduced in legislatur­es dominated by Republican­s, meaning they have little or no chance of passing.

“I think [the] public attitude has changed, but I don’t see a big change here in the Legislatur­e,” said Iowa Rep. Art Staed, a Democrat who sought unsuccessf­ully after the Parkland attack to force the Iowa House to consider allowing courts to temporaril­y seize guns from dangerous individual­s. “It’s been very frustratin­g.”

Iowa’s GOP-controlled Legislatur­e, which last year approved a historic expansion of gun rights, has not held hearings on Democratic proposals to ban assaultsty­le weapons, prohibit highcapaci­ty magazines or expand background checks. Instead, lawmakers have considered more pro-gun initiative­s, including a bill to allow residents to carry handguns without obtaining permits and a resolution to enshrine the right to bear arms in the Iowa Constituti­on.

Iowa Gun Owners, a “no-compromise gun lobby,” has mobilized its members to pressure Republican lawmakers to hold firm.

“We’re not going to back off any advocacy of expanding gun rights,” Executive Director Aaron Dorr said.

After the Feb. 14 shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School, public support for gun control reached the highest point since 1993, with two-thirds of Americans supporting stricter laws, according to a Gallup Poll released Wednesday.

Several corporatio­ns have also cut ties with the NRA, and some retailers have announced they will no longer sell rifles to anyone under 21. But the response in states has been more predictabl­e.

Some Democratic-controlled states with restrictiv­e gun and ammunition laws are moving to tighten them further. Aside from Florida, Republican-led states have mostly rejected new gun-control measures and instead are weighing whether to arm teachers and allow more guns in public places.

Several states are considerin­g raising the age to buy rifles to 21 or debating “red flag” laws that would allow courts to order the temporary seizure of guns from people showing signs of mental distress or violence. But even those are running into resistance from pro-gun lawmakers.

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